Biological evaluation of various spacecraft cabin atmospheres, I

Mathematics – Logic

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Scientific paper

The physiological consequences of exposure to several possible spacecraft atmospheres were evaluated. Each atmosphere contained oxygen at a partial pressure of 180 mm Hg. Rabbits and rats were exposed at 1 atm abs. for one week each to atmospheres containing nitrogen, helium, argon or neon; and to pure oxygen at 200 mm Hg. In addition rats were exposed at a total pressure of 474 mm Hg to atmospheres containing nitrogen, helium or neon. Metabolic rates were increased in animals exposed to helium-oxygen at sea level, and reduced in those exposed to the low pressure, pure oxygen environment. Rates during sea-level exposures to argon and neon, and during the altitude exposures, did not differ appreciably from results obtained in air at sea level. Rabbits sustained a significant loss of hemoglobin (9%) and red blood cells during their exposure to helium-oxygen. These responses are consistent with the thermal characteristics of the several gaseous environments. A good correlation was found to exist between the calculated relative convective heat transfer in the various atmospheres and the observed metabolic rates. The possibility of an effect of helium at the molecular level has not been ruled out completely. After saturation with the inert gases studied, rats decompressed to 100 mm Hg showed the most severe symptoms of decompression sickness; nitrogen produced less damage; animals exposed to helium or neon were free of serious symptoms. The data provide the first experimental support for several theoretical advantages of neon for use in space cabin atmospheres.

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